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For this episode, I sat down with Fraser MacLean — layout artist, animation historian, and author of Setting the Scene— whose career spans from Who Framed Roger Rabbit to Disney’s Tarzan and beyond.
But this conversation isn’t just about credits. It’s about craft. About perspective. And about protecting knowledge that risks being forgotten.
We talk about:
✨ The Myth of “2D”
Fraser challenges the idea that traditional animation is flat. From multiplane cameras to deep canvas innovations, he breaks down why classic hand-drawn animation is aggressively three-dimensional — and why that matters.
🎬 Why Layout Holds the Purse Strings
Layout isn’t decoration. It’s structural. It determines cost, efficiency, staging, depth, and emotional clarity. Fraser explains why removing layout from a pipeline isn’t saving money — it’s misunderstanding how films are actually built.
🎨 Falling in Love with Drawing
From growing up in Scotland to discovering Fantasia on the big screen, Fraser shares the formative moments that shaped his artistic path — including being told repeatedly at art school that his drawing was “outdated” and irrelevant.
🚪 Knocking on Disney’s Door
After being ignored by studios, Fraser physically tracked down Disney’s production office during Roger Rabbit, demanded a phone number, and ended up being hired because of the very life drawings his tutors dismissed.
💻 Technology Is a Tool — Not a Savior
From radar mechanics in WWII to the digital revolution in animation, Fraser reflects on how technology changes pipelines — but not the fundamentals of visual storytelling.
📚 Why He Wrote the Book
Setting the Scene isn’t nostalgia. It’s documentation. It’s about preserving knowledge of staging, perspective, and spatial storytelling before it disappears from modern pipelines.
This episode is a masterclass in thinking — about depth, about discipline, and about the invisible architecture behind great animation.
🎧 Listen now — and if you want to join these conversations live, with animators and storytellers from around the world, come hang out with us inside The Toon Room:
👉 thetoonroom.com
By Alexander KurilovFor this episode, I sat down with Fraser MacLean — layout artist, animation historian, and author of Setting the Scene— whose career spans from Who Framed Roger Rabbit to Disney’s Tarzan and beyond.
But this conversation isn’t just about credits. It’s about craft. About perspective. And about protecting knowledge that risks being forgotten.
We talk about:
✨ The Myth of “2D”
Fraser challenges the idea that traditional animation is flat. From multiplane cameras to deep canvas innovations, he breaks down why classic hand-drawn animation is aggressively three-dimensional — and why that matters.
🎬 Why Layout Holds the Purse Strings
Layout isn’t decoration. It’s structural. It determines cost, efficiency, staging, depth, and emotional clarity. Fraser explains why removing layout from a pipeline isn’t saving money — it’s misunderstanding how films are actually built.
🎨 Falling in Love with Drawing
From growing up in Scotland to discovering Fantasia on the big screen, Fraser shares the formative moments that shaped his artistic path — including being told repeatedly at art school that his drawing was “outdated” and irrelevant.
🚪 Knocking on Disney’s Door
After being ignored by studios, Fraser physically tracked down Disney’s production office during Roger Rabbit, demanded a phone number, and ended up being hired because of the very life drawings his tutors dismissed.
💻 Technology Is a Tool — Not a Savior
From radar mechanics in WWII to the digital revolution in animation, Fraser reflects on how technology changes pipelines — but not the fundamentals of visual storytelling.
📚 Why He Wrote the Book
Setting the Scene isn’t nostalgia. It’s documentation. It’s about preserving knowledge of staging, perspective, and spatial storytelling before it disappears from modern pipelines.
This episode is a masterclass in thinking — about depth, about discipline, and about the invisible architecture behind great animation.
🎧 Listen now — and if you want to join these conversations live, with animators and storytellers from around the world, come hang out with us inside The Toon Room:
👉 thetoonroom.com